

Buy On Saudi Arabia: Its People, Past, Religion, Fault Lines-And Future Reprint by House, Karen Elliott (ISBN: 9780307473288) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: Good progress in questioning the Kingdom - House has a helpful set of viewpoints on Saudi Arabia -- her own upbringing in a small fundamentalist Christian Texas town, her long-term familiarity with the Kingdom, and her identity as a woman, by which she gains access to both the male and female worlds of Arabian society. Her account is sympathetic but too honestly critical for royal sensitivities. She paints the Saudi rulers as caught in a paradox. On one hand they have caved in to pressure from extremely fundamentalist religious leaders, and funded a huge effort to promote such religion across the world. On the other hand they have been cowed by US pressure, which broke their will to resist Western interests in 1973 and demanded restrictions on the export of fundamentalism after 2001. House clearly wonders how this highly exclusive culture, this dangerously undiversified economy, and this extremely autocratic government can last much longer without imploding. It's helpful for North Americans to question all the implications of alliance with Saudi Arabian interests, and this book makes good progress on that. I suspect, however, that there's more to be revealed about Saudi Arabia's role in movements for religious supremacism and sectarian rivalry across the region. Review: Interesting and well worth a read - very readable and fascinating book.
| Best Sellers Rank | 526,171 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 917 in Religious History of Islam 48,865 in Reference (Books) 64,316 in Social Sciences (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (365) |
| Dimensions | 13.18 x 1.85 x 20.32 cm |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0307473287 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0307473288 |
| Item weight | 1.05 kg |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 320 pages |
| Publication date | 4 Jun. 2013 |
| Publisher | Vintage |
B**H
Good progress in questioning the Kingdom
House has a helpful set of viewpoints on Saudi Arabia -- her own upbringing in a small fundamentalist Christian Texas town, her long-term familiarity with the Kingdom, and her identity as a woman, by which she gains access to both the male and female worlds of Arabian society. Her account is sympathetic but too honestly critical for royal sensitivities. She paints the Saudi rulers as caught in a paradox. On one hand they have caved in to pressure from extremely fundamentalist religious leaders, and funded a huge effort to promote such religion across the world. On the other hand they have been cowed by US pressure, which broke their will to resist Western interests in 1973 and demanded restrictions on the export of fundamentalism after 2001. House clearly wonders how this highly exclusive culture, this dangerously undiversified economy, and this extremely autocratic government can last much longer without imploding. It's helpful for North Americans to question all the implications of alliance with Saudi Arabian interests, and this book makes good progress on that. I suspect, however, that there's more to be revealed about Saudi Arabia's role in movements for religious supremacism and sectarian rivalry across the region.
P**G
Interesting and well worth a read
very readable and fascinating book.
E**S
Seized!
If you live in KSA then don't bother ordering a copy of the book to be delivered here - it will be seized by customs as mine was.
_**_
Book Pages Badly Cut!
I ordered this book as a present for a friend. When it arrived I was very surprised to see that the pages were not all cut correctly. They were slightly different sizes! So that when the book was closed the right paper side was raggedy and uneven! I've never seen a book like that before!
A**.
Una grandiosa introduzione sugli usi e costume del Regno dell'Arabia Saudita e la casa reale Al Saud. Il testo è avvincente, capace di coinvolgere il lettore su argomenti politici e sociali di grande spessore. Le testimonianze e gli aneddoti sono inseriti nella narrazione senza spezzare il filo logico, ma aiutando concretizzare il discorso. Il libro è senza dubbio un testo molto utile per chi vuole un'infrinatura su di un paese misterioso fondato su di una branca dell'Islam sunnita molto conservatore.
G**M
This book is informative and well written. But then I would have expected no less from Karen Elliott. I know first hand that Karen spent a lot of time and effort researching for this book, including a lot of time in Saudi Arabia. That is in addition to the insights she earlier gained as Foreign Editor of the Wall Street Journal (and later as publisher). I was amused at Karen's comparison of Saudi society to that of Matador, Texas, in the 1950's and 1960's. But I certainly do appreciate where she was coming from and her perspective on it. I have noticed a number of other reviewers commenting on her references to Matador and wondering why she would draw that comparison. I will attempt to explain. I grew up with Karen, her sister, and brother at Matador, Texas,(population about 600, total county population about 1,200 now) during that time. She was one of the first persons I remember meeting as a child, aside from my immediate family and numerous cousins. At that time the Elliott family lived in an old house across the mesquite pasture from our house. My recollection is that their old house, rented from an old Matador Ranch cowboy named Gafford, did have some electricity but no running water; water was hand pumped from a cistern. Rattlesnakes would occasionally crawl out from under the the old house in the summer to loiter in the moist coolness of her mother's flowerbeds, where they likely got their heads chopped off with the garden hoe that all women kept near the doors to their houses for just that purpose. I remember building sand castles with Karen in the dry creek bed under the old wooden bridge near our homes after the sand was moist from one of the infrequent rains. West Texas was in a drouth then, as it is now. Not that it ever rains much in West Texas anytime. I thought she was the prettiest girl in the whole world then. Karen's father, Ted Elliott, was a good man, but he had his ways. Her mother Baily was an angel. Ted Elliott, a World War II veteran from rural Texas, ran the Modern Welding Shop in Matador. The only thing Modern about it was in the name. It was basically a blacksmith shop and Ted was the village blacksmith of Matador, population about 1,325 back then. Ted was a very hard and steady worker, well read and with a native mechanical genius at welding and making new things needed by the local farmers and ranchers. He provided for his family as best he could and it wasn't bad by Matador standards. But the whole area economy was then, as now, not very good and nearly everyone, even the people we thought were rich, was poor as dirt by today's modern city standards. We didn't know it because we didn't have much to campare with. Ted and his family were members of the Church of Christ, probably the most conservative of the Christian Protestant denominations. So were my parents and grandparents. Ted was one of the most conservative of the conservatives. Ted was described by many as cranky and hardheaded, and he probably was. But he was honest and forthright, and as for Bill Clinton today at the Presidential Library dedication describing George W Bush as being someone who spoke his mind, well he never met Ted Elliott. Later the Elliotts bought a modest frame house in town and Ted bought Baily a new 1965 Ford car about the time Karen was a junior in high school. Ted didn't believe in watching television and there was never a television in any of their houses. The homes were always spotlessly clean, but there were never televisions or any other entertainment devices. I think they finally did get a telephone (my own parents never got a telphone until after I had left home to go to Texas A&M). Ted didn't belive in dancing or partying or any other such foolishness, not for himself and certainly not for his daughters. He didn't want his daughters out dating unruly boys and carrying on like a bunch of heathens. That was what Ted wanted and that was what he got. Even by rural West Texas standards, Karen grew up in a repressive atmosphere. Probably much more so than nearly anyone else in town. All of rural West Texas is still staunchly independent, religious, and very conservative. It was even more so then. We used to have to drive sixty or a hundred miles just to buy a case of beer. Or pay the bootlegger a lot higher price. Only in the last year or so did Matador and Motley County elect to allow grocery stores or any other stores to sell beer and wine. The old red sandstone Motley County jail was in the 1970's condemned as being the worst jail in Texas, largely because all the three or four jail cells on the second floor faced the hanging cell and trapdoor in the middle. There is hardly any crime, except for a shooting every couple of decades or so. Usually over land or women, about the only things of value. The County Sheriff and his one deputy, along with the occasional highway patrolman, are all that is needed to keep the peace in the county. The people are overwhelmingly independent, law abiding, hardworking, honest, religious, and expect everyone else to be the same way. I guess some people would describe this as a repressive society. I didn't think so then when I was growing up there, and I don't think so now. Yes, it was and still is a little primitive compared to the permissiveness in the rest of the country. But that may be for the better. Most of us growing up there had our share of fun and wild times. Matador and Motley County society was never anything near the absolute monarchy and total islamic theocracy that still keeps Saudi Arabia and much of the rest of the world back in the stone age. But I can understand how Karen Elliott, growing up under the very firm hand of Ted Elliott, can remember it being a little repressive. But look how it all turned out. Both Karen's younger brother and her older sister earned doctoral degrees and sure don't seem very repressed to me. And Karen, well, she travelled the world, won the Pulitzer Prise, ran The Wall Street Journal, raised two children, and wrote this book. Not too bad for the daughter of a blacksmith from Matador, Texas.
H**S
due to the geopolitical developments, knowledge is essential to escape intentionally or unintentionally created news. this book provides a first hand and insight into the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and uncovers many facts that you perhaps wanted to verify but may also startle you in certain aspects. from my perspective and being very interested in the Middle East, definitely worth reading
G**Y
Article arrived on time and in excellent condition.
M**I
History and religion of the petrol kingdom.
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